Home > Geography, United States > Sarah Palin scares me, Part IV

Sarah Palin scares me, Part IV

September 25th, 2008

COURIC: Explain to me why that enhances your foreign policy credentials.

PALIN: Well, it certainly does because our– our next door neighbors are foreign countries. They’re in the state that I am the executive of.

Russia and Canada are apparently in Alaska.

Americans, this woman with an amazing grasp of geography could be your leader.

Quote from Katie Couric’s interview with Sarah Palin, 25 September 2008.

Brad Geography, United States

  1. September 25th, 2008 at 10:54 | #1

    And I had a friend yesterday that told me that she thought Palin could out-debate Obama. I think you probably heard my laughing over there in Hawai’i!

  2. September 25th, 2008 at 12:27 | #2

    So is this a bigger gaffe than Biden saying that President FDR addressed the nation by television after the stock market crash of 1929?

    Biden makes more mistakes and worse gaffes in an afternoon than Sarah Palin makes in a month. I still can’t believe Obama picked that clown to be his VP.

  3. October 1st, 2008 at 11:36 | #3

    Geoff, according to Aunty, Sarah Palin *is* the great debater …

    “The one thing I found during the [2006] debates was no matter how knowledgeable her opponents were on the issues, it didn’t matter,” Mr Halcro told BBC News.

    “She has an amazing ability to turn a 45 second answer into a folksy story… she’s never been forced to know the issues.”

    Mr Halcro said Mrs Palin’s biggest strength is her ability to “fill the room with her presence”.

    Having studied at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government and Harvard Business School, in addition to being a lifelong Alaskan and lawmaker, Mr Halcro came to the debates armed with a wealth of knowledge and statistics.

    Mrs Palin even said Mr Halcro would make “the awesomest statistician,” when asked during a debate what position she would appoint Mr Halcro to if elected governor.

    Still, statistics were not enough to put even the smallest dent in Mrs Palin’s rising popularity.

    “There were many times the third candidate and I would walk off stage and shake our heads,” Mr Halcro said. “It wasn’t policy it was populism.”

    Whatever it was, Mrs Palin beat her opponents, garnering 48% of the vote, while Democrat candidate Tony Knowles received 40% and Independent Halcro received 9%.

    “I don’t think anyone could have beat her,” Mr Halcro said. “It wasn’t about how much she knew about the issues. People didn’t care about her experience, they just thought, ‘This is the drink of water we need’.”

    Be afraid.

  4. October 1st, 2008 at 12:23 | #4

    I don’t know what scares me more about that story: Sarah Palin, or the people that voted for her.

  1. September 25th, 2008 at 16:30 | #1